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Photo, Print, Drawing Camp Curry, Curry Village, Mariposa County, CA Yosemite National Park Curry Village

[ Photos from Survey HALS CA-65  ]

More Resources

[ Drawings from Survey HALS CA-65  ]
[ Data Pages from Survey HALS CA-65  ]
[ Photo Captions from Survey HALS CA-65  ]

About this Item

Title

  • Camp Curry, Curry Village, Mariposa County, CA

Other Title

  • Yosemite National Park Curry Village

Names

  • Historic American Landscapes Survey, creator
  • Curry, David
  • Curry, Jennie
  • Curry, Foster
  • Curry Camping Company
  • Yosemite Park & Curry Company
  • Underwood , Gilbert Stanley
  • Daniel, Hull R.
  • Vint, Thomas
  • Olmsted, Frederick Law, Jr.
  • Stevens, Christopher M., project manager
  • Kidd, Anne E., field team
  • Matsov, Alexander, field team
  • Mauro, Jeremy T., field team
  • Beetler, Samuel E., II, field team
  • McNatt, Jason W., delineator
  • Jacobs, James A., historian
  • Bieretz, Renee, photographer
  • Yosemite National Park, sponsor

Created / Published

  • Documentation compiled after 2000

Headings

  • -  national parks & reserves
  • -  leisure
  • -  concession
  • -  automobiles
  • -  tents
  • -  cafeterias
  • -  views
  • -  wooden buildings
  • -  public comfort stations
  • -  pines
  • -  cliffs
  • -  gable roofs
  • -  swimming pools
  • -  paths
  • -  foot trails
  • -  orchards
  • -  parking lots
  • -  platform
  • -  cabins
  • -  rock
  • -  peeled logs
  • -  World Heritage sites
  • -  California--Mariposa County--Curry Village

Latitude / Longitude

  • 37.737738,-119.571919

Notes

  • -  See also HAER CA-95 for documentation of the Stoneman Bridge.
  • -  Significance: Curry Village, known as Camp Curry from the time of its establishment in 1899 through the 1960s, was historically and remains a highly significant development of guest accommodation within the Yosemite Valley. It holds significance within the history of the National Park Service as both one of the earliest tourist camps of its type in a national park as well as a place where the service’s nascent design office implemented some of its first approaches to managing the automobile. Educators David and Jennie Curry founded Camp Curry as a less expensive choice to the handful of hotels then existing in the valley and a more convenient one than traditional camping as it eliminated the need to travel with food, supplies, and tent equipment. They situated the camp among a stand of trees on the relatively flat ground between one of the main roads traversing the valley and the talus pile at the base of Glacier Point. It grew steadily in the 1900s and more explosively in the 1910s and 1920s as the initial scattering of tents gave way to more permanent structures and buildings arranged in precincts that pushed east, west, and south from the camp’s core. This rapid transformation of Camp Curry largely occurred in an unplanned manner; substantial buildings for guest services formed a core at the center and tent, and later bungalow and bungalette, accommodation extending in the flat area to the east and west of the core and pushing up the talus slope to the south. The Currys and their family-run concession steadily modernized Camp Curry during these first decades, balancing visitor expectations for comfort, entertainment, and leisure against the government’s goals and policies. The latter were shaped by a changing cast of characters as oversight of the valley shifted from the State of California to the United States Army and ultimately, in 1916, to the National Park Service. Camp Curry was reinvented as a modern and easily accessible vacation resort set within the grandeur of Yosemite Valley. It manifested as a complex composed of hundreds of structures and buildings having a rustic, even humble architectural presence and an informal arrangement under tall conifers. These character-defining features furnished a unique tourist experience within the valley, an experience that remains very much today as it was at the end of Camp Curry’s period of vigorous expansion during the first three decades of the twentieth century. The constructed tourist landscape—partly through the low-key design of its buildings and structures and partly because of its history of piecemeal development—remains subservient to the astonishing beauty of the natural landscape.
  • -  Unprocessed Field note material exists for this structure: N53
  • -  Survey number: HALS CA-65
  • -  Building/structure dates: 1899 Initial Construction
  • -  National Register of Historic Places NRIS Number: 79000315

Medium

  • Photo(s): 26
  • Color Transparencies: 2
  • Measured Drawing(s): 6
  • Data Page(s): 55
  • Photo Caption Page(s): 3

Call Number/Physical Location

  • HALS CA-65

Source Collection

  • Historic American Landscapes Survey (Library of Congress)

Repository

Control Number

  • ca3881

Rights Advisory

Online Format

  • image
  • pdf

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Cite This Item

Citations are generated automatically from bibliographic data as a convenience, and may not be complete or accurate.

Chicago citation style:

Historic American Landscapes Survey, Creator, David Curry, Jennie Curry, Foster Curry, Curry Camping Company, Yosemite Park & Curry Company, Gilbert Stanley Underwood, et al., Bieretz, Renee, photographer. Camp Curry, Curry Village, Mariposa County, CA. Mariposa County California Curry Village, 2000. Documentation Compiled After. Photograph. https://aj.sunback.homes/item/ca3881/.

APA citation style:

Historic American Landscapes Survey, C., Curry, D., Curry, J., Curry, F., Curry Camping Company, Yosemite Park & Curry Company [...] Yosemite National Park, S., Bieretz, R., photographer. (2000) Camp Curry, Curry Village, Mariposa County, CA. Mariposa County California Curry Village, 2000. Documentation Compiled After. [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://aj.sunback.homes/item/ca3881/.

MLA citation style:

Historic American Landscapes Survey, Creator, et al., photographer by Bieretz, Renee. Camp Curry, Curry Village, Mariposa County, CA. Documentation Compiled After. Photograph. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, <aj.sunback.homes/item/ca3881/>.